Infognition Video Enhancer Free Download
A few minutes later Peter mentions they've been back from Narnia for a year, meaning that it is at least May 1942 now. Narnia 1 full movie. Goofs At the beginning, when Susan picks up a magazine from the news stand, it is apparently a December 1939 edition magazine. This is not possible, as the Pevensie children were evacuated to the countryside at the start of the previous movie, which (as it featured an air raid on London) could not have happened before September 1940, and it is quite clearly summer during the scenes at Professor Diggory's house.
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Almost everyone has a mobile phone with a camera that can record both still images and video nowadays. The only problem is that mobile video codecs don't exactly produce video of the highest quality. In fact, phone video is typically blocky, out of focus, shaky, and, well, pretty much useless for anything other than showing grandma your latest kid-spitting-up-strained-peas masterpiece. So I had really high hopes for this nifty-sounding tool from Stoik Imaging, makers of the very well-received and image editing and management applications.
Their work on techniques that improve the quality of marginal still images is really out on the cutting edge. Could their free demo do the same for mobile video? Unfortunately, in this first version of ($49, free demo with watermarks), the answer is a resounding no. Video Enhancer offers a wide range of options designed to clean up most of the problems with mobile phone videos.I certainly wasn't expecting the kind of fantasy, CSI Miami-esque super resolution enhancement that's only possible in the world of television and movies, but almost anything would be an improvement.
The software supports a wide range of mobile video codecs, which is good because most desktop PC media players or organizers offer spotty coverage to replay video from phones. That's about where the good news ends.
Stoik Video Enhancer requires the latest version of Windows Media Player and DirectX, so factor in the storage and time-to-download and -install these products into your consideration. If you're already up to date, great. If not, it could add another 15 minutes, a reboot, and about 75MB of hard drive space to the installation requirements. I started out by picking some short (under one minute) clips of standard-definition video from my Android mobile phone (352 by 288 resolution, encoded in h.263).
The largest was about 1.6MB in size and 33 seconds in length. The program, by default, has some modifications checked -- these are the real powerhouses of the program, and the reason you might pay $49 for Video Enhancer instead of just transcoding your mobile video into a more compatible format using something free, like FFMPEG. By default, Stoik Video Enhancer opts to perform noise reduction and deblurring, and to make adjustments to the color balance and exposure levels, which (again, in theory) should drastically improve most of the things that are wrong with your average mobile phone video. It does not, by default, perform image stabilization or deinterlace videos, but you can check off boxes that will add those tasks to the video's enhancement to-do list, as well. I clicked the Start button but I'm not really sure what happened next. The program informed me that it would take about 30 minutes to complete the tasks I selected, so I walked away.